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Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1928 COMMUNISTS OF COLORADO MAKE ELECTION FIGHT (By a Work DENVER, Workers (¢ Co (By spondent) Colo. M —The the f the been Lit- When Tammany Smith spoke in September w e time to exposing his action of Colorado’s demoer strike- breaking governor, Billie Adams. At one outdoor meet y platforms were si have no forces wha to conduct outdoor meetings. distributed 5,000 leaflets. adv ing the Foster meeting to Sr audience. Arrangements were made with the Bill Posters Union to tack up our posters around the packing houses and railroad shops, and we expect to cover the republican meet- ing at which Curtis will speak. Tickets to the Foster meeting are being sold in nearby coal camps and we expect a number of miners to attend. ng 60 of our he We | In Hospitals In Ani WILL INTENSIFY." “RALLIES INLAST "WEEK OF DRIVE | /Will Welcome Foster, | | Gitlow Saturday | The last full |election campaign will be marked with many rallies, both outdoors week of the Red) WORKERS AID |and indoers, and the full mobiliza- Phew shows scene in children’s ward in Jamaica city hospital, |tion of the membership of the| one of og graft ridden city institutions to which poor, unable to | Workers (Communist) Party for the | IN RED DRIVE pay the high fees of private hospitals and doctors, are forced to |concluding drive of the campaign, | Piotr PRR children are mistreated and neglected in these city | according to the District Campaign | Committee. The drive for funds in the shops|COntributions Come In Great Pro ugh the i iti } bre . Crowds w: ws ee nother interesting experiment} A focussing point for the Com- MUTED cies dence manna eign a sense, some of the major thawtlap ine eeeetinn sNeguboge ucioe| ant moving picture bie oe ae producers|munist election campaign in York-|{hrough sacrifice, financial: jada acters. aig ke | “extras” filled with fake rumors and | hen much improve-| into the Tira GOSH eee Conte the Feed rely ra he eld otherwise, can the forces of labor | Thectival ints opetk Hite cee ilar ae Pcs woe ot ee en made in the number | yj AnAFTyRER sential be Dr Slat St, ok Tocader, Get. ool |e: reumised for the! overthrow" ot [pacar nechnsice ima lets THRU: [eee eens itera ce ene Sahat . ECU fy eee tay as ch albums’ were obtained of |at 8 p. m. Scott Nearing, Red can. |‘t° *ystem that condemns the work-|trial town during’ the height of a | eget gerne eae ere tie eek ae penetrating into| rural characters, as well as of rural | did te f F povernan tt Mamilemmey, (ie class to poverty and slavery un-| dock and mill strike being led by| crowd in the street “Cann ro e em g corners of the U.| cinema spectators, | Ceare tO Bd 'Y: | der the system of society that chains | i les ver a thousand of new r fected by the travel- ing cinema outfits. The lack of electric current in most of the villages caused the de- ers of traveling cinema appar- atus to devise a source of light gress Being Movies in the Soviet Villages |seen, whi valuable by given questionnaires, in which the nist state campaign manager, will peasants recorded. their impressions | also speak. George Lloyd, of the Fast We print herewith another list of contributions to the Communist Campaign Fund, these contributions coming from workers and poor farmers who have little to spare after providing their — dependents |and factories will be intensified. | Made b |Collection lists for the Red cam-| LY ates will be circulated by class- |conscious workers. Militant mem- bers of fraternal working class or- ganizations are urged to- obtain | donations for the Communist cam- Big Red Rallies. j h were found exceedingly | paign. the film producers. bare | will speak. Rebecca Grecht, Red! them to the capitali hi ae semonstcatiba of filnes|| Capdidate for absembly tn: the Eistlja: 7 ay ncoy ¢ th vel ti the villages las aoe | Dintsee ae Beale: ahd: Conians 2 las of the election ges the spectators were | District of the Br yp campaign the neéd for funds be- comes increasingly urgent. Con- mal Crackers , A POWERFUL PLAY “Gods of the Lightning” Is a Powerful Drama Based on Sacco-Vanzetti Murder VAG intense drama about working-|principal witnesses for the prosecu~ #4 class life is now being presented tion. But during the trial the “evi-| jat the Little Theatre. It is a power-'dence” is ignored and the defend-} |ful play wrought from the flaming |@nts are ostentatiously asked about . Groucho Mare and Bobbie Perkins, |and bitter facts of the seven years’| their political beliefs, their degree | in the four Marz Brothers’ Animal|torture and ultimate murder | Crackers at the 44th Street Theatre. of |of affection for “the flag”—all for | | zetti. |tarian jury. “Gods of the Lightning” by Max-| well Anderson and Harold Hicker-| |son is one of the most eloquent, | | moving and effective plays produced jin this country in many years. oe There are a number of minor ir-| ritations in the play. A migratory | worker, whose economic formula- |tions are based on a daffy system} |of “numbers” and “cabalistic” signs; The authors present clearly alan extremely unconvincing Jewish | Striking picture of the system which | hobo, brought in, apparently, for| |murdered Sacco and Vanzetti. There |comie relief; and the curious escape lare passages in the play which!of Suvorin, the restaurant owner] ‘ring with bitterness and hatred| who confessed to being an accom-| against the money-men whose lust! plice to the murder, from the death | for the blood of the two Italian im-|house just a half hour before the | migrants was satisfied only when | execution. | their lifeless bodies were lifted from| gytvia Sidney, as Rosalie, Mac- the electric chair. The authors have lready’s sweetheart, plays effective- taken the salient facts of the actual | jy until the final scene which is once record, the background of hatred and| more laid in the grimy side-street prejudice, but they have disguised, |Macready (Charles Bickford) and| murdered,” Capraro (Horace Braham). | Macready is a vigorous, fiery la- bor agitator with an implacable hatred for the boss class and their Then, finally: “Mac- ready is murdered.” Rosalie’s his- |trionie sofrow at this point, while | subjectively valid, shifts the artistic jand propagandist emphasis from the |Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Van-|the benefit of a 100 per cent Ro- : LATIN AMERICA \ | | RED TRADE UNION MEET MAY, 192 Program Announced for Conference The program of the congress of the Latin American Red Trade Unions, which will take place on Montevideo in May, 1929, for the purpose of creating a Confederacion Sindical Latina Americana (Latin American Trade Union Confedera- tion), has been announced, as fol- lows: 1, report of the provisional sec- retariat on the preliminary work done for the organization of the congress; 2, struggle against Brit- ish and American imperialism and jagainst the reaction in the Latin American countries; 8, the attitude towards the Pan-American Federa- tion of Labor; 4, program of econ- omic demands; 5, national and in- ternational trade union unity; 6, problems of immigration and emi- gration; 7, the problem of the na- tive Indians and organization of the rural proletariat; 8, creation of the Confederacion Sindical Latina Amer- icana; 8, elections. USSR AVIATION GROWS. MOSCOW, Oct. 25.—There have been no accidents in the flying ser- vice in the Soviet Union during the last two years, despite the tremen- dous growth of passenger and com- Thomas’ Audience Applauds Russia. Tn spite of the fact that Norman Thomas got front-page publicity in| the capitalist press when he came | here, the hall, which holds from 400 to 500 people, was far from be- which could be procured in localities deprived of electricity, After prolonged and thorough testing of various models, the special commission of Sovkino selected the “G O Z” model as most suitable for cinema, and for the thrill of the|jamin Gitlow, presidential and vice- plot; at the same time they pointed Presidential candidates of the Work- out the defects, such as inadequate|¢cts (Communist) Party, leading lines, an East 125th St., New York City, Al- | dazed by the relentless brutality of exander Trachtenberg, treasurer: | the forces of capitalist law and gov- arrive at it, E. Eukson, $2; Martin Sellers, $5; |p" d too rapid mount-| the Grand Central station next Sat- 55 | ing. It is wrong to revolve the reel | U" day after the completion of their| Charles Riniken, $1; Julia Yovri- | of the pictures. Harlem section of the Workers | tribute as generously as you can. |docile henchmen and retainers in the | sorrow of the masses to the sorrow Peasants Like Dramas. (Communist) Party, will preside. | Contribute immediately. “Forward jcourt, the church, and the press.|of an individual. « 7 nal i Foster and Gitlow. |! contributions to the National |Capraro, on the contrary, is a gen-| “Gods of the Lightning” is a fine ,_ The peasants expressed their lik-| When William Z. Foster and Ben-|Fiéction Campaign Committee, |tle, passive, and wistful young play. Go to see it at once. Rumors ing for the comic clement in the Ue ae | Workers (Communist) Party, 43 |Italian anarchist, hurt, and rather |persist that the Tammany police will not for long permit this sharp attack on the ruling class to con- tinue unmolested. —Sender Garlin. mercial lines, according to an an- nouncement by Soviet air officials. New lines are being developed, in- cluding a projected 5,000 mile rout a 2,500 mile route into Persia, a an air line connecting Moscow, Len- ingrad and Berlin. the traveling rural cinema appar- ing filled. This also with no admis- atus, murder and robbery is committed. sion charged. When Claessens in- shen, $1; William Yaiken, $1; Peter | An agent provocateur, a Department too rapidly in the village; the spec-| country-wide ‘tours, a Red army, | Bagdonor, $1; Dan Adams, $1; E. On the final day of ‘the strike, | tator ought to be given sufficient With Red torchlights flaming and | tredueed Thomas he lamented that) Great activity in the distribution |time to read the lines and to properly |hannera of welcome held sloft, will|Leivkoi, $1; Andy Streak’ $4, §_|0f Justice stoolpigeon, aidy in the TH RST BY ‘ there was no socialist movement jof cinema apparatus is carried on visualize this or tha’ scene. Bris eee them and escort them in a/Rakarich, $1.25; H. Kerkkinen,|@trest of Macready and Capraro. | Reo yC ORY liere and tried to make up for that }by the Cinema Section of the Chief | subject there were some harsh eriti-{march to the Workerst Center at|$6.70; Frank Banmholty, $11.60; 1. |The remaining scenes carry thru by telling what a wow of a party | Board of Political Education which cisms made. For instance: “Regard-|26-28 Union Square. Wojeak, $3; George Solaontis, $5; With a terrifying swiftness and thewocialists have in Germany. The /supplies apparatus through the local tices. of repeated warnings ‘by the|. On the following day both\’Red| Jolin J. Hudach, €660; Labor amie. tragic. inevitebility the -frame-tp| Kelth-Albee } snly applause of the whole evening |cultural-educational, public and ¢o-| representative of the Village Soviet | standard-besrers will address a|cational Alliance, $3; Karl Jaakals, |@%d execution of the two workers. | was when he mentioned that “the | operative organizations, and the public organs, the operator | huge crowd of workers at the final|$1.50; Charles Woods, $2; Hunj,.|_ The authors’ conception of Mac-| pect Film Show A M E Bee J Communists are in power in Rus-| Besides the traveling cinemas, the turns the reel too quickly, so that|Red rally at Madison Square Gar- |Stoopack, $1; St. Nucleus 9-Berwyn, |T2dy is vivid and real, He is not] In ‘Towa WEEK sia.” While we are not worshippers of words and phrases, yet the way Thomas failed to use “class strug- gle,” “revolution,” “capitalism” or “socialism,” and the frequency with which he used “fellowship” and “co- yperation” and his gentle chiding of he worst labor fakers, was really noticeable. Mobs Pull Strange Stunt. | It seems strange that just at this ime, when the Communists are the | only ones exposing the role of Gov- srnor Adams as strikebreaker of the toal miners’ strike, which was led vy the I. W. W., that, instead of sup- | sorting our candidates, especially zeorge Saul, who lost his job in the »ost office for his activity in behalf | £ the striking miners, that the I. W. W. should issue a leaflet against ur Party. But that is what the W. W. has done. Of all minority parties the Work- rs (Communist) Party will have the ‘uliest state ticket. We have also | tandidates for the U. S. congress and for state representatives and state senators. Three separate peti- | jons were filed to cover all these ffices. —WILLIAM DIETRICH. ‘Any Official Who Registers Negroes Will Lose His Job” BATON ROUGE, La., (By Mail). —“Any registrars of vot who put Negroes on their rolls, will be re- noved from office, and I am the nan who will put them out,” stated governor Long at a meeting of the 3ast Baton Rouge Parish Good toads Association. Ho further stated hat anyone who encourages Ne-. rroes to vote will also receive the! | Red Army. “GOZ” outfit is utilized also by the many rural clubs, schools, and read- ing rooms. Traveling cinema service to the rural distriets is furnished also by the Gosvoyenkino organizations, which demonstrates films chicfly of its own production, dealing with the life of young peasants in the The Osoaviakhim | (volunteer aerial and chemical defence) asso- ciation maintains a number of itinerant cinema outfits for the pur- pose of demonstrating specific films in rural districts. At the present time there is a pro-| cess of rationalization being carried,| out in regard to the distribution and utilization of traveling outfits, which promises considerable profits which are going to be fully utilized towards improving and extending the service to the rural districts. Choice of Village Mov The two essential questions now confronting the Soviet cinema in- dustry are: What kind of movies does the village want to see, and who constitutes the bulk of the rural cinema spectators. The old idea that the peasants would prefer to see scenes of village life has been exploded by the state- ments of the peasants themselves. An interesting experiment as ri gards gathering the views of the vil- lage on the subject of the cinema was carried out through the active} publie workers in the rural districts, | and with the assistance of a num- ber of peasant newspapers who had enlisted the aid of their corre-| spondents in the villages. | A vast amount of material was re- ceived, illustrating the general so- cial conditions in the villages, and containing numerous _ critical opinions expressed by individual pea- sants on the films which they had for science and agriculture. | the peasants of the Moscow district, | “in scientific pictures; for instance, how the tractor works, how to keep | a good bee-hive, how to rear pedi-| \gree cattle... . tures of the struggle of the working class, and also historical films.” peasants for pictures from the life| of working people in other countries, as well as for pictures showing the! |new and mighty construction work | P! going on in the U.S. S. R. for popular scientific films. dealing with rural culture. ae ne, wink tllee waa: ‘ommunist”; 4 re : forts to Spread Culture to the Vil. American lage.”” sants contains a profound meaning, 7 ¥ “No book and no lecture can impress “Bertha” was carried into the midst us so much as the moving picture,” of the crowd, pointing its threaten- thus wrote the peasants from the ing muzzle over the heads of the district of Vladivostok. on agricultural subjects the views : of all peasants seem to be identical, November 4 at Madison Square from the Moscow district to the| Garden. Maritime Province in the Far East. | . . eh Generally, the views expressed by | Nearing, Communist candidate for| the peasants, and the answers filled 4 by them in their questionnaires, in-| Bimba, Communist editor and can- dicate the| tremendous rise in the|didate from the 13th Assembly Dis- we have failed to understand the | den. picture.” | On the other hand, the peasants | were extremely grateful for explana- 3 A00 WORKERS tions given by the cinema operators, | W§ particularly in villages with numbers of semi-literates and erates. | large illit- A great demand was also shown | films dealing with popular! SCORE NAVY DAY “We are interested also,” wrote Union Sq. Meet Hits Anti-USSR Bloe Continued from Page One munist) Party were called for in succession at the end of the meeting |by Bert Miller, crupnleatien a Life of Workers. \tary of District 2, who was chair- i man, the crowd responded lustily. A desire was also expressed by the| Whe vena ates citeced aceboy: |ful spectacle with red as the pre- dominant color. The red-lettered lacards held aloft over the crowd \by some 40 workers, bore such in- A great many requests were made, S¢Tiptions as: “Not a Gun, Not a Give us also pie-| There is als “tm War. Vote Communist”; “The So- Ps ee for @ film ialist Party is a War Party. Vote * “We Are with San- Imperialism”; “Hands Pesce eoeranoy, the pee te econo aeite when aeste workers, and advertising a huge Ai Red Campaign Rally and Russian Siegel Cee Te ce | HevoleHiin calebtation at0) bat tall The chief speakers were: Scott | governor of New Jersey; Anthony cultural requirements of the village|trict; Alexander, of the American) }Cent, Not a Man For Imperialist! Til, $10; J. Kannosto, $1; Mrs. John | Rezar, $2; Joseph Duisik, $5; Henry |Liavea, $1.50; A. Staniulis, $5; J. Stedham, $1; District 8, $15; Dis- trict, 1, $40; John Hirlack, $2; Di | trict 10, $8; Sam Sakra, $5; Finnish Society, $2.85; William Z. Foster, $201.63; Harry Lawrence, $13.50; |Iaisner Chorer, $13.50; Southern | California Campaign Committee, $6; |Southern California Campaign Com- |mittee, $20; Adolf Mekuza, $1; R. | Grnburg, $1; H. L. Goldberg, $1; L. |Harris, $4; Tom Mzokoff, $14; -W. |Concord Y. W. L., $10 American Lithuanian Workers, $10; A. B. Han- es 75 cents; F. Peterson, $2; John |Cherweny, $1; F. E. Finberg, $1; | American Lithuanian Society, $5.45; | District 10, $7.20; John Gerp, $2. District 7 Supports Sixth World Congress |bership meeting of District 7, of the Workers (Communist) Party, after hearing the report of the Sixth Con- tional, (decisions of the Congress. | The resolution stresses the need |for fighting the social democracy, especially the so-called “left,” and cited that in view of the danger of |@ new war the Congress correctly \insisted upon the necessity of tight- ening the Bolshevist discipline of all parties, increasing their interna- jtional activities, removing fractional |struggle, sharpening the fight | against right dangerg and fostering a consistent struggle for Bolshevist | unity. Hochberg made a statement that DETROIT (By Mail)—The mem- |; i made by Charles Wolfe, | Off Nicaragua”; “Down with Mor- passed a resolution expressing its, | gan’s Fleet”, ete. A realistic aspect full agreement with the work and| the “agitator” of the conventional | 42nd Street and Broadway By Popular Demand |stage—a visionary and a fool, but} strong, courageous, a fighter with! clear-cut conceptions of the class. nature of capitalist society. In the| same way the authors escape the! | pitfalls of melodrama by making the | district attorney not a bloodthirsty | villain but an intelligent, cynical | harlot, serving the master class, Cee and One I “A Shanghai Document” “A Crackerjack Film” —Daily News. | Three scenes in the play are al- THE FIRST SOVIET COMEDY “Three Comrades EXTRA ADDED FRATURE— nvention” RUSSIAN NEWS REEL Direct from Moscow most unforgettable. One is in the THE THEATRE GUILD office of the district attorney while Prgnenes i | he is “fixing” the witnesses for the F A U S Ee | state. The other memorable scenes | are during the trial and final sen-| GUILD Thea. W, 2nd st. tence. Here the two defendants— even as Sacco and Vanzetti on that | sunny morning in April in Dedham, | Mass.—show, in their defiant words, | their complete contempt for the! |flimsy pretenses of law and order. | | In the scene in the district attor- | ney’s office, the cynical corruption jand brutality of the capitalist legal | system is presented in its most glar- , ing light. Ambitious, ruthless, clever, |the district attorney is shown fas-; _ 17 '@ mustcal romance of Chopin |tening the iron links of the frame- | ‘up chain. While admitting to his | jclose friend, the owner of the mill | inwhich Capraro and Macready led SAM HARRIS po pd Bala the strike, that the two men are in-| sratinees, Wednesday & Saturday, 2 nocent and that his case is thin, he MUSICAL COMEDY HIT \nevertheless proceeds energetically i | |to get a conviction—and with suc. l IK K 3 k GIR. | cnt" THE LADDER | cess. | | A former custodian of a house of | SEEN IN.ITS REVISED FORM? | | prostitution, terrorized with black- | imail by the wily district attorney, jand a half-wit youth—these are the | ‘Thea., W. 48th St., Eves. 8.30 | [CORT oaveiinces, Wed" & Sat. | | HUNGER STRIKE GOES ON behtantlig okt ge the OM anicncas | | LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Oct. 28.-- “an at Wot B" | Charles Smith, president of the As- “T*™™N’S, 46th St. Wh of Pyar] |sociation for the Advancement of | Mats. Wed. Peete i ; Atheism, who was convicted here on SCHWAB and NDEL'S |a charge of distributing atheistic A oo literature, entered upon the eleventh Mats. Thursday and Saturday, 2.30 Strange Interlude John GOLDEN Thea. ostn . of Brway EXVENINGS ONLY AT 5:30 | ‘Thea., 7th Ave. & 69th St. JOLSON "hotest Mats. WedeSat| GUY DETTE DE WOLF | ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER | 8.30. | 30 | TVIC REPERTORY 45t.ctnav. 50c, $1.90, $1.50, Mats. Wed.&Sat.,2.30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight, “Phe Cherry Orchard.” ‘Tues. Eve., ‘The Would-Be Gentleman’ “The Cradie Sons.” “The Master Builder.” ‘invitation au age.’ Wed: Eve., Thurs. Bye,, > Fri, Extra, Mat., ‘Phe Cherry Orcha) Fri. Eve., “Phe Would-Be Gentleman,” “L'Invitation au Voyage.” NITE HOSTESS by Philip Dunning Staged by Winchell Smith Produced by JOHN GOLDEN. ERLANGER THEA, W. 44th st. See nee me ner Evenings 8.30 — Mat.: Wednesdays & Saturdays, 2:30. George M. Cohan’s Comedians with POLLY WALKER in Mr. Cohan's Newest Musical Comedy BILLIR” TTLE Thea., W. 44th St. Eve. 8.30 Te its Wie GODS of the LIGHTNING by Mawell Anderson & Harold Hickerson. ins MACHINE ~~ OOD NEWW e . with GEORGE OLSEN'’S MUSIC. B d Richard Dix ee TORGWAY | nonan or THE at 4int St. MARINES”, IRENE VERMILLION & CO. “A NIGHT AT THE CLUB.” Oths, i s i Negro Labor Congress; Paul Crouch, | shy acelin Sees ASCENT | ea prenalonad candidate; Rebecca he accepts the resolution on the | day of his hunger strike today. He; The Soviet film producers are at- Grecht, Communist candidate for the|work of the Communist Interna- ; Showed no weakness in his determin- | __ tentively studying the tastes and re-| Assembly; H. Benjamin, Communist tional, but has reservations on the | ation to carry out the hunger strike; No worker can vote for the can~ quirements of the peasants, so as|candidate for the Assembly; Nor- American question. as a protest against the state law, dldates of Green, Woll, Hutcheson, ‘ i ; : 7 aN Lewis, Batty, Beck: . Schles- not only to properly cater to the de-/man Tallentyre, Communist organi- |which forbids an atheist to testify| inger’and Milquia S* ame action. | This attitude is taken throughout he south by both the den:ocrats and he republicans. The Negroes are lisfranchised all through the south tnd such remarks have heen made by | Kelth-Albee The Workers (Ci mist) Party demands 2 federal law for soctal surance In the ekness, acel= dent, old ag all wage en be in the hands of f! tr to workers, the A ; OY expenses to be covered by the state ° in Mi i spr ve | Needle Wi Get a collection | in ¢ various leaders of the major parties.snu the employers. mands, but also to cooperate with the|zer in Minnesota; a sei ts aN lint at the headquarters of the Nee. | 2 Court. i ate schools ‘and the rural reading rooms | of the Federation of Working dle Trades Campaign Committee, 24 Smith is serving a jail sentence of in guiding the cultural education, Women, and a representative of the Union Square, Room 202, twenty-seven days rather than pay at collect | [funds for the election campaign of | Pioneers of America. | the Workers (Communist) Party. of the Soviet Village. a fine of $25 and costs. MARXIAN CLASSIC HERE Bukharin’s Lucid Book in 3rd Edition | “Historical’ Materialism, A Sy em of Sociology,” by Nikolai Buk- iarin, has entered its third edition, tecording to International Publish- ms, of 381 Fourth Ave., New York, This is adequate testimony that this Marxian classic has filled a al aeed of the class conscious American workers. sd attempts have been made n the past to popularize historical naterialism which, a ind’a method, constitutes the basis of Marxism. But this is the first ‘ime that the subject has received such a complete and weatment. Applied by all Marx- sts, historical materialism has never yeen adequately presented in book form before; and with this excel- ent translation from the Russian, \ regrettable gap’ in Marxist litera- ure has finally been eliminated. Jetailed and comprehensive, the 00k is at the same time written n such a way as to be intelligible so every interested worker regard- tess of whether he joins a class and secures the guidance of a teacher-, Written to be understood, it is a plassic of scientific exactness clathed n the most readable and non. Kechnical language. ¢ Few books of a sociological na- a philosophy » systematic | have sti as tur ter | ed up as wide an in- k by the foremost Marxian n of the world. Dealing problems of funda- mental import, analysing the strue-| ture of human society, searching for the of human behavior, Buk- | harin brings to his analysis a clar- ity of vision and lucidity of presen- | tation seldom equalled in the liter- mysteries of social life are resolved into a fascinating narra- ; the intricate structure is re- vealed as a network of relation- ships between man and nature and man and man. Society is shown to have its own laws of motion, un- dergoing a evolution, And the fundamental aspects of social organization are illuminated with penetrating originality. | With this third edition, printed on | fine paper and bound in a durable! and attractive maroon cloth, an oc- tavo volume of 320 pages, the In- \ternational Publishers have fur- |nished another example of their |policy of supplying substantial and well-made books to the American worker. “Historical Materialism’”| |having gone inte three editions, the | publishers were able to reduce its |price from $3.25 ta $2.50, ‘ Spread The DAILY WORKER Ge of the best methods of carrying on election work is to see that the DAILY WORKER is placed in the hands of as many workers as possible. During the period of the Election Campaign we will sell the DAILY WORKER at $6.00 per thou- sand. No meeting or campaign rally should be without a bundle of DAILY WORKERS. Order Now! <—« @ Please send me........ +...copies of The DAILY WORKER at the rate of $6.09 per thousand, NAME ADDRESS To arrive not later than ....... I am attaching a remittance to cover same. AMERICA —The Significance today and the attitude 43 East 125th THE NEXT WAR fi JAY LOVESTONE THE UNITED STATES IS PREPARING FOR ANOTHER WAR. WHY? —The role of American Imperialism —United States vs. Great Britain —The Role of Reformism —The Role of the Communist Party This pamphlet should be in the hands of every worker interested in a clear analysis of America munist) Party toward the coming’ war. 10 cents WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS Street “THE UNKNOWN WARRIOR” This is C Lest Hopkins Theatre. Raynal’s French play. PREPARES Rose Hobart, Vera Truseda’ cast, Theatre, Tuesday night. Th at the Mansfield Theatre. of Peace Pacts ' “YOUNG LOVE,” a comedy by Willard. Casino Theatre. The book of the Workers (Com- are E. J. Ballantine, Emi! William Franklin, New York City John Wray have the princip: Beatrix Thomson are in the cast. “CRASHING THROUGH,” a comedy by Saxon Kling, opens at the Republic Theatre Monday night. Henrietta Crosman, “THESE FEW ASHES,” a comedy by Leonard Ide at the Booth Sinclair, Natalie Schafer, Henrietta Goodwin, Ellis Leni Stengel and Ralph J. Loche. “AMERICANA,” a new revue by J. P. McEvoy, opens Tuesday Kahn and McEvoy and Irving Caesar have written the lyrics. Dorothy Coulter and Sammy Carr are in the cast, sented Tuesday at the Theatre. Masque. James Rennie, Dorothy Gish, Tom Douglas and Catherine “HELLO YOURSELF,” a musical comedy, Tuesday night at Richard Myero and lyrics by Leo Robins. “THE FINAL BALANCE” from the Yiddish of David Pinski, at the Provincetown Playhouse, Tuesday evening. In the cast “REVOLT,” a new play by Harry Wagstaff Gribble, will open at the Vanderbilt Theatre on Wednesday night. the author of “March Hares.” x “TIN PAN ALLEY,” a comedy by Hugh Stanislaus Stange, comes to the Biltmore Theatre Thursday. Claudette Colbert and will open today at the Charles ‘ecil _Lewis’s translation of Paul ter Vail, William Morris and le and Albert Bruning head the e principal players include: Hugh ‘Baker, The score is by Roger Wolfe Samson Raphaelson, will be pre- The cast includes is by Walter DeLeon, music by ily Graham, Mary Michael and Gribble is al roles. The New Plays | |